Revelations about U.S. digital eavesdropping have fanned
concerns about Internet privacy and may complicate U.S. attempts to write rules
enshrining the free flow of data into trade pacts with European and Pacific
trading partners.
As more and more consumers
and businesses shop and sign up for services online, the IT
industry is working to fend off rising digital protectionism it sees as
threatening an e-commerce marketplace estimated at up to $8 trillion a year.
"Restrictions on
information flows are trade barriers," Google's executive chairman, Eric
Schmidt , said at a Cato Institute event last month, warning
that the worst possible outcome would be for the Internet to turn into "Splinternet."
The unease of U.S.
technology companies has mounted in lockstep with rising worries overseas about
data privacy.
German Chancellor Angela
Merkel — a target
of U.S. spying — has called for a European Internet protected from Washington's
snooping. Brazil and the European
Union plan to lay
their own undersea communications cable to reduce reliance on the United
States. And other countries are showing a preference for storing data on local
servers rather than in the United States.
President Barack
Obama acknowledged
this week that it would take time to win back the trust of even friendly
governments.
Trade experts predict the
United States will have to make concessions on data privacy in the
Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership talks (TTIP)
with the EU, and will probably not get all it wants in Pacific Rim trade talks
either.
"It is unfortunate
because there were some good nuanced conversations happening before the spying
allegations," said Adam Schlosser, director of the Center for Global
Regulatory Cooperation at the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce .
"But there is now a tendency
to inappropriately conflate national security and law enforcement with ...
commercial privacy practices, which has put a damper on rational debate."
The TTIP and the
Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) talks are billed as next-generation trade
negotiations, covering not only tariffs and goods trade but also common
standards and goals in areas ranging from labor standards and environmental
protection to intellectual property and data flows.
The last two issues are key
for digital trade, which encompasses everything from U.S. cherry farmers
selling direct to Chinese families via Alibaba Group Holdings' Tmall electronic
shopping platform to plane maker Boeing monitoring in-flight
diagnostic data on-line.
A 2011 report by the
McKinsey Global Institute found almost $8 trillion changed hands each year
through e-commerce, something that explains the keen interest IT firms and
industry associations are taking in the trade agreements.
According to data compiled by the Sunlight Foundation, the computing
and IT industry has been the second-biggest lobbyist on the TPP, after the
pharmaceutical industry.
Industry groups such as the
Software & Information Industry Association say free exchange of data is
the key focus.
"For SIIA and its
members, the most crucial issue in the trade agreements under negotiation is to
get provisions permitting cross-border data flows," said Carl Schonander,
international public policy director at SIIA, whose members include Reuters
News parentThomson Reuters .
BSA the Software Alliance,
an advocacy group for the software industry has warned that TPP partners
Australia, Canada, Chile, Mexico, Peru and Vietnam are among countries adopting
or proposing rules banning or limiting companies from transferring personal
information off-shore. This might mean U.S. companies have to set up local
servers in every country.
"Data flows are the
lifeblood of the digital economy," said BSA policy director David
Ohrenstein. "Trade agreements (must) ensure borders are open to data
flows."
In an ideal world for IT
companies, countries signing the TPP would promise not to impede cross-border
data flows or make companies set up local servers.
U.S-based lobbyists expect
those provisions to make it in, possibly with exceptions, but say work is still
needed to convince trading partners to promise that any new regulations -
including on privacy - will not restrict trade unnecessarily.
In Europe, where the
backlash against U.S. spying has been the strongest, policymakers want changes
by mid-2014 to the Safe Harbor Agreement, which allows U.S. companies with
European-level privacy standards access to European data.
An opinion poll by the
Atlantic Council and the Bertelsmann Foundation found rules governing cross
border data flows and the alignment of privacy protections were among the most contentious
and important, issues in the U.S.-Europe talks.
Atlantic Council Vice
President Fran Burwell said it would be hard to get support from theEuropean
Parliament or
countries like Germany without an agreement on data protection.
"I think the big
concession that (the U.S.) will have to make will be in the data privacy
area," she said.
Tension is also brewing
over intellectual property. U.S. music, book and software companies see piracy
of copyright material as the biggest threat to their exports, while companies
like Google worry about being held responsible for the actions of clients on
their networks.
Data privacy group
Electronic Frontier Foundation said proposals in draft TPP chapters would
restrict flexibility in allowing fair use of copyright materials and encourage
low-quality software patents by setting the bar too low.
A group of 29 smaller tech
companies wrote to U.S.
Senate Finance Committee ChairmanRon
Wyden last week
and warned against including harsher criminal penalties for minor copyright
infringements in the TPP. The committee has jurisdiction over trade issues in
the U.S.
Congress .
"Reddit is a platform
the same way that the telephone is a platform," said Erik Martin, general
manager of on-line news hub Reddit, one of the signatories to the letter.
"To put so much burden
on the providers to deal with problems from individual users is just really
going to put a chill on investment and put a chill on innovation."
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